A multi-stable rotational energy harvester for arbitrary bi-directional horizontal excitation at ultra-low frequencies for self-powered sensing
A rotational multi-stable energy harvester has been presented in this paper for harnessing broadband ultra-low frequency vibrations. The novel design adopts a toroidal shaped housing to contain a rolling sphere magnet which absorbs mechanical energy from bidirectional base excitations can perform continuous rotational movement to transfer the energy using electromagnetic transduction. Eight alternating tethering magnets are placed underneath its rolling path to induce multistable nonlinearity in the system, to capture low frequency broadband vibrations. Electromagnetic transduction mechanism has been employed by mounting eight series connected coils aligned with the stable regions in the rolling path of the sphere magnet, aiming to achieve greater power generation due to optimized rate of change of magnetic flux. A theoretical model has been established to explore the multi-stable dynamics under varying low frequency excitation up to 5 Hz and 3g acceleration amplitudes. An experimental prototype has been fabricated and tested under low frequency excitation conditions. The harvester is capable of operating in intra-well, cross-well and continuous rotation mode depending on the input excitation, and the validated physical device can generate peak power of 5.78 mW with as low as 1.4 Hz and 0.8g sinusoidal base excitation when connected to a 405 Ω external load. The physical prototype is also employed as a part of a self-powered sensing node and it can power a temperature sensor to get readings every 13 s on average from human motion, successfully demonstrating its effectiveness in practical wireless sensing applications.
Funding
Wolfson School of Mechanical, Electrical and Manufacturing Engineering, Loughborough University
History
School
- Mechanical, Electrical and Manufacturing Engineering
Published in
Smart Materials and StructuresVolume
33Issue
9Publisher
IOP PublishingVersion
- VoR (Version of Record)
Rights holder
© The Author(s)Publisher statement
Original Content from this work may be used under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 licence. Any further distribution of this work must maintain attribution to the author(s) and the title of the work, journal citation and DOIAcceptance date
2024-07-17Publication date
2024-08-08Copyright date
2024ISSN
0964-1726eISSN
1361-665XPublisher version
Language
- en